Introduced by Remington in 1906, the .32 Remington was marketed as an alternative to the .32 Winchester Special. Hunters seeking a good bullet for hunting deer and bear that could be found in an auto-loading rifle were presented with a nice choice in the .32 Remington.

Unfortunately, the cartridge never really caught on with the shooting and hunting public and has since fallen out of favor. Though it is a great choice for hunting under certain circumstances, the .32 Remington is now rarely found outside of old gun collections or the collections of people who specifically look for rare and obsolete cartridges like the .32 Remington.

When the Remington Arms Company introduced the Remington Auto-Loading Rifle (later known as the Remington Model 8) in 1906, they introduced four new cartridges: the .25 Remington, the .30 Remington, the .32 Remington and the.35 Remington.

The .32 Remington was specifically designed to be a competitor to the .32 Winchester that was offered in the popular Winchester Model 94 lever action rifle. The original load of the cartridge propelled a 170-grain, .321-caliber bullet at just under 2,200 feet per second, which generated around 1,700 foot pounds of energy.

Since Winchester pretty much had the lever-action rifle market locked down with the venerable Model 1894, Remington decided to produce rifles chambered in roughly comparable cartridges that were either auto-loading (Model 8 & Model 81) or pump-action (Model 14 & Model 141). Among several other cartridges, all of these rifles were chambered in .32 Remington in an effort to stake out a portion of the market of hunters and shooters who wanted a medium-bore auto-loading or pump-action rifle.

Though the .32 Remington is a decent cartridge and is quite capable of taking a wide variety of game under the right circumstances, it never was popular. In fact, of all the cartridges introduced by Remington along with the Model 8 rifle, only the .35 Remington is still in regular production today. For one reason or another, all of its sister cartridges have gone by the wayside over the years and fallen out of use in the general hunting public.

.32 Remington loads

As stated earlier, the .32 Remington is no longer in regular production by any major ammunition manufacturer. It is possible to occasionally find loaded ammunition at gun shows and on the Internet, but the supply of factory-loaded .32 Remington ammunition is sporadic at best. When it is available, it is usually pretty expensive. The most common load is still a 170gr soft point traveling between 2,000 and 2,200 feet per second.

If you have a rifle chambered in .32 Remington that you really want to shoot or hunt with, hand-loading is probably your best bet. There is still a fair amount of reloading data out there about the cartridge and .321 diameter bullets aren't too difficult to obtain. Brass is occasionally available from major distributors, and it is even possible to resize brass from a couple of other cartridges to the appropriate dimensions to work in a rifle chambered in .32 Remington.

When shot from a good rifle by a competent shooter, the .32 Remington can be an accurate cartridge. Back when I still had it, I shot many groups around 1-2 MOA with my old Remington Model 8.

That being said, one of the biggest shortcomings of the .32 Remington is its limited range. It fires bullets with a relatively low ballistic coefficient at a relatively slow velocity, which makes for a trajectory that is the opposite of flat. With this in mind, the maximum effective range for the .32 Remington is about 200 yards. However, for most shooters and conditions, 100-150 yards is probably more realistic.

Hunting with the .32 Remington

Even with all of the shortcomings inherent in the cartridge, the .32 Remington is still a great round for use on big game such as deer, feral hogs, and black bear. I've hunted pretty extensively with a Remington Model 8 chambered in .32 Remington, and I've used it to take my biggest trophy white-tail deer, a couple of feral hogs and even a Corsican Ram with it.

I can attest that with proper shot placement and when used at close range (where bullet drop is minimal), it is an absolutely deadly cartridge on medium-sized big game. As long as the range is short enough, it can even be an ethical cartridge for hunting elk (though it wouldn't be my first choice). Additionally, since it fires a moderately sized bullet at a moderate velocity, the .32 Remington does not produce large amounts of ruined, bloodshot meat like high-velocity cartridges do.

Though it has largely fallen into disuse by most of the American hunting community, the .32 Remington can still be a great cartridge for hunting deer and other big game. As long as you can get enough ammunition (often easier said than done) and take only shots at close range, the deer and feral hogs in the area should be wary of a hunter armed with an old Remington Model 8 or 14 chambered in .32 Remington.